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Read about Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Coming August

RUSSIA IN COLLAPSE
By Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
with a new Afterword by the author

List Item No. 339 * ISBN: 1-932236-00-7 (cloth) * 300 pages * List Price: $25.00

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"People wanted a democratic Russia overnight, without a period of transition, of learning and of growing accustomed to it. An automobile cannot come down from a high mountain by driving off a cliff—it needs to take the long series of switchbacks."Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

It has been twenty-five years since the exiled Soviet dissident and Nobel laureate Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn delivered his famous address at Harvard University. Too radically opposed to the ideology of progress, and too critical of the West's culture of materialism, Solzhenitsyn failed to win many admirers among his American audience. Harvard expected paeans to freedom and tolerance, but what it received (or so it thought) was sheer pessimism and ingratitude.

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn has never been one to shade the truth to ease its public consumption. And so, having returned to his homeland in 1994, Solzhenitsyn has largely slipped from public consciousness, exiled from the realm of intellectual respectability by his liberal critics, who typically characterize his thought as "medieval," "theocratic," or "authoritarian."

Russia in Collapse, first published in Russia in 1998, is the first book of nonfiction by Solzhenitsyn to appear in English since 1995. It contains his latest and most considered thought on the state of Russian politics, history, society, and culture. But it also includes his reflections on more general topics like law, democracy, patriotism, local self-government, and authority. The book ends with a new afterword by Solzhenitsyn written specifically for this edition. To those with ears to hear, Russia in Collapse confirms that Solzhenitsyn is no pessimist, and certainly no theocrat, but rather a hopeful realist in full engagement with his times.

What They're Saying...

"In this vigorously written work, the great Russian Nobel Laureate continues to plead eloquently for the cause of human freedom and dignity. He documents how Russia has emerged 'from under the rubble' of communist totalitarianism in a most problematic, even pathological manner. He in no way believes that this path was preordained and he limns a wise alternative vision of humane and free governance for Russia."
Daniel J. Mahoney, author, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The Ascent from Ideology


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